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One month after the disaster: Volunteer Ministers help Japan look to the future

The Volunteer Ministers are one dedicated and effective group. Hats off to them!

Today, one month after what has become known as Higashi Nihon Daishinsai, “The Eastern Japan Great Earthquake Disaster,” some 160,000 displaced persons are still subsisting in makeshift shelters in hundreds of schools, hospitals and public gyms. Scientology Volunteer Ministers have been providing physical and personal relief to survivors for the past month, and hundreds more are on their way.

Within an hour after the magnitude 9 earthquake of March 11, 2011, hit Japan’s East Coast, staff at the Scientology Volunteer Ministers Los Angeles headquarters began gathering information from volunteers in Japan to plan and coordinate response efforts. Four Volunteer Minister assessment teams mobilized to view firsthand the damage in the Miyagi Prefecture while another team in Tokyo began coordinating logistics for Japanese Volunteer Ministers throughout the country and those getting ready to travel to the country from abroad.

On March 15, the Los Angeles headquarters arranged the first of two flights of Los Topos search and rescue specialists to Japan, a group that gained international prominence last year with their dramatic rescues of Haiti survivors buried for a week or longer in the rubble of the Port-au-Prince earthquake.  After seeing the effectiveness of the Volunteer Ministers Disaster Response Team with whom they worked closely in Haiti, many Los Topos members trained as Volunteer Ministers over the past year. Several of them arrived directly from Christchurch, New Zealand, where they had been rescuing survivors of that city’s February earthquake.

Since the disaster struck, the Scientology Volunteer Ministers Japan Disaster Response Team has helped more than 48,000 displaced persons in dozens of shelters distributing food, water and supplies and providing Scientology assists. Assists, often described as “spiritual first aid,” help the individual overcome the effects of loss, shock and trauma and speed recovery by addressing the spiritual and emotional factors in illness and injury. 

“People here have experienced tremendous loss,” said one Japanese Volunteer Minister, “but through Scientology assists they come to terms with what happened to them and start planning for the future.”

The official in charge of the Onagawa Town disaster effort expressed his appreciation for the help of the Scientology Disaster Response Team: “I have heard many disaster victims say they feel good, relaxed, relieved from body pain and healed from the trauma of this disaster after this group delivers the technology called ‘assists’ developed by L. Ron Hubbard.”

A Hashikami City Councillor thanked the Volunteer Ministers, saying theirs is a service the Japanese people can find nowhere else.  

In shelters in Kesennuma, Onagawa, Watari and Sendai, Volunteer Ministers have delivered well over 7,000 assists, and continue delivering hundreds each day.

“I cannot believe I have received such a helpful service in a time like this,” and “it eased the shock of the earthquake,” were among the comments overheard in the shelters when assists were being done.

A man whose business was swept away in the tsunami began his assist in sorrow and walked away humming, telling the Volunteer Minister he plans to rebuild his inn as soon as he can.

Several hundred Volunteer Ministers are en route or in the final stages of preparation to volunteer for a month or longer with the Japanese Disaster Response Team.

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The Scientology Volunteer Minister program was initiated by Scientology Founder L. Ron Hubbard in 1976. There are now hundreds of thousands of people trained in the skills of a Volunteer Minister across 185 nations.

For more information about the Scientology Volunteer Ministers disaster response efforts please visit: blog.volunteerministers.org.

    • #Japan
    • #earthquake
    • #tsunami
    • #Scientology
    • #Volunteer Ministers
    • #L. Ron Hubbard
  • 1 year ago
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Scientology Volunteer Ministers in Earthquake-Ravaged Kesennuma Deliver Food to Remote Areas—On Bicycle

This is a great solution, and another excellent example of how the Volunteer Ministers do whatever it takes to help those in need:

With roads impassable and relief services stretched to the limits, how to deliver food and supplies to ill, injured and elderly residents in outlying rural areas around Kesennuma remained a critical but unsolved dilemma for government and civilian relief forces.

Then the Volunteer Minister disaster relief team that has operated a shelter in Hashikami Junior High School in Kesennuma for the past month took on the challenge, proving once again that their motto—“Something Can Be Done About It”—isn’t just words.

“Our motto is a call to action,” says the lead Volunteer Minister in Kesennuma.

When the Volunteer Ministers described the problem in a call for help to  their network of five teams in the decimated areas, a solution was almost immediately forthcoming: Bicycles.

Fast action turned this from a bright idea into a visit to a large local bicycle store that readily donated 32 bicycles, helmets and bags.

Students of Hashikami Junior High School, site of the shelter staffed by Volunteer Ministers,  eagerly signed up to ride the delivery bikes and worked with VMs to affix a sign to each bike basket, with their school and the “Something Can Be Done About It” motto.

Kesennuma city councilmember Mr. Moriya came to officially launch the students on their mission to deliver donated food and water to the isolated victims of the quake and tsunami. At the sendoff event, covered by Sanriku Shimpo newspaper and a local TV station, the councilmember said he usually declines offers from volunteer organizations, but he has seen the Volunteer Ministers provide effective assistance that is unique and therefore welcome. He also commented that he had not seen so many smiles on the faces of the junior high school students since the tsunami, and he thanked the Volunteer Ministers and the students for their work and urged them to continue their work in the area.

    • #Scientology
    • #Volunteer Ministers
    • #Japan
    • #earthquake
    • #tsunami
    • #Something CAN Be Done About It
  • 1 year ago
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Photos of the Japanese Scientology Volunteer Ministers in action
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Photos of the Japanese Scientology Volunteer Ministers in action

Source: blog.volunteerministers.org

    • #Japan
    • #Scientology
    • #Volunteer Ministers
    • #disaster relief
    • #earthquake
    • #tsunami
  • 1 year ago
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About

I am a Scientologist and a highly trained Scientology auditor. (Auditor is defined as “one who listens,” from the Latin audire meaning to hear or listen. An auditor is a minister or minister-in-training of the Church of Scientology.) My intention is to help people improve themselves and their lives, and achieve spiritual freedom.

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